Posts Tagged ‘cooking methods’

There is a lot written these days about how to get the “zing” back in your marriage, the “pow” back in your career and the “bam” back in your exercise routine. But, what if your interest in cooking has waned to the point that a peanut butter and bacon sandwich sounds like a dream meal? Food is an important, albeit necessary, part of any living creature’s day. There is the nutrition factor, of course: eating a balanced diet is good for you and wards off disease. There is also the social angle of eating. Throughout history, food has been a bridge to bring people together culturally, spiritually and physically (we all know the heart-warming story of the first Thanksgiving). Yes, you can jaw about the weather or about the awful dress that your nemesis wore to the last party, but talking about food is even better! So, what happens – suddenly or not – when you feel that cooking is no longer fun, rewarding or social? What happens when cooking becomes a dull chore that needs to be done instead of a creative process that you want to do for your family and yourself? First, let’s take a look at the symptoms of lackadaisical cooking:

1) you come home from work and gawk at the contents of your fridge hoping that something awesome and interesting appeared magically in there while you were gone. There are half empty jars of yellowish mayo, muddied olives with their pimento tongues sticking out at you along with the leftover chili (from when??) that has a furry pile of grayish bacteria waving at you (what my husband calls, “a science experiment”) and meat that has been frozen since last fall. In fact, all the meat in your house is frozen almost to the point of pushing diamonds out of the way as the hardest substances on earth.

2) you put a load of laundry in the washer, feed the fish, play with the cats, balance your checkbook, exercise on the treadmill, fill out all the FAFSA forms for every college kid in your neighborhood – anything to avoid the kitchen.

3) you shake not stir yourself a luscious martini before you begin cooking then forget what you were going to cook.

4) you ask your husband and/or your kids what they want for dinner and they say, “Not kielbasa again!!”

If you are nodding your head and thinking that you have done one or more of these things, you have the cooking doldrums. What to do? There’s always the Food Network, but if you work all day, disdain perky people doing something that you want to avoid, are on a diet or just don’t have the hours to give to Rachel Ray that she so justly deserves, then maybe you need alternatives.

Here we go:

Try AllRecipes.com or other internet sites (including Cooking.com, Cooks.com, Recipe.com, Epicurious.com) : Most of these will send you a recipe a day right in your email. If you’re not interested in what is pictured, you click delete and it goes away – no sloppy kitchen, no dirty dishes, no lingering fishy smell. If you do like what you see and MAYBE would like to cook it, you can save it to your recipe library, print it out in small (under age 25), medium (ages 26-40) or large (aged 40 and older) format, or just leave it in your email for another day. I like AllRecipes because the recipes aren’t terribly far-fetched nor do they need crazy ingredients: you don’t need a bank loan to buy a single strand of saffron or travel to the netherworld to find an African horned melon.

Try a different supermarket: I am lucky to have a Fresh Market near me, but my friends swear by Produce Junction and other specialty grocery stores. Visit when you have a little time to wander around – list in hand or not. You may buy an item that will force you to experiment. Case in point: a butternut squash is not, by itself, a very interesting vegetable. It’s pale, pastel orangey-beigy, hard skinned. No two are alike. They are odd, bumpy – sometimes suggestive – things. But…it’s the possibilities that, if you are open to, can make an ugly, unassuming butternut squash into a fascinating and delicious entree, side dish or soup.

Try a different style: Are you one of the billions of people who received a crock pot for your wedding and never used it? Well, there’s a wealth of slow-cooker recipes out there for you to prepare. I have a crock that even has recipes built right into the cooker!! Just think: you arrive home from work to a meal that’s ready in minutes and you didn’t have to beg, pander or bribe anyone to do it. The wonders of modern technology did it for you! Yay!!